District of Columbia v. National Parks Association

444 F.2d 963, 144 U.S. App. D.C. 88, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10545
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 27, 1971
Docket24026
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 444 F.2d 963 (District of Columbia v. National Parks Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District of Columbia v. National Parks Association, 444 F.2d 963, 144 U.S. App. D.C. 88, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10545 (D.C. Cir. 1971).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The District of Columbia appeals from a decision of the District of Columbia Tax Court cancelling a $2,706.00 real property tax assessment for the fiscal year 1969 against a building belonging to the National Parks Association. 1

Late in 1967 the Association purchased its Washington headquarters building from another institutional owner and applied to-the District for exemption from real property tax. Upon being refused, the Association brought suit on its assessment in the Tax Court, claiming that it fell within the scope of 47 D.C.Code § 801a, which provides:

The real property exempt from taxation in the District of Columbia shall be the following and none other:
* * * * * *
(h) Buildings belonging to and operated by institutions which are not organized or operated for private gain, which are used for purposes of public charity principally in the District of Columbia. 2

The issues in the Tax Court revolved for the most part around the scope to be given the word “charity” and the meaning of the expression “principally in the District of Columbia” as these were used in the above-quoted provision. Noting that it was faced with a close question, the Tax Court nevertheless found for the Association, saying that “[t]he decision would have gone to [the District] if at any point in the research —legislative history, precedents, analogies, other exemption provisions showing legislative purpose — a reasonable basis had been found for strict construction of section 1(h) of the Act of December 24, 1942.” 3

However, without deciding whether § 801a(h) should be strictly construed, we find compelling reason in the legislative *965 history and the express terms of the Act for excluding the building of the National Parks Association from that provision. For regardless of the way in which it is construed, § 801a(h) must be read in conjunction with § 801a(k), specifically exempting from taxation buildings belonging to numerous named institutions, in the main scientific or educational in character, and “buildings belonging to such similar institutions as may be hereafter exempted from such taxation by special Acts of Congress.” 4

Treating subsection (k), the Tax Court summed up its impact upon the remaining provisions of the Act in this way:

The naming of certain specific exemptions thus took eai*e of some of the organizations (“institutions”) which considered that they had a problem at the time of the 1942 Congressional hearings, and preserved their special interests. Congress thus specifically used one of the two procedures by which exemption may be obtained: exemption “by special Act of Congress.” This was done “in order that there may be no misunderstanding.” Nothing in such Congressional action derogates the other procedure: construction by the taxing authorities and the courts of the exemptions given in general terms by subdivisions (f) through (j) of section 1 of P.L. 846. (Emphasis added.) 5

Our own review of the legislative history to the Act convinces us that § 801a (k) does more than take care of a few deserving organizations that “considered they had a problem at the time of the 1942 Congressional hearings.” We find that the insertion of this provision into the Act reflected Congress’ inability to derive suitable generalized language covering institutions, for the most part educational or scientific in nature, that were felt deserving of tax-exempt status while at the same time excluding those that, although capable of effectively pleading a scientific or educational character, were considered properly subject to taxation. And we find that the final expression of § 801a(k), including within its scope “buildings belonging to such similar institutions as may be hereafter exempted from such taxation by special Acts of Congress” (emphasis supplied), far from being redundant as the Tax Court would have it, means just what it says — that institutions not otherwise exempt who are similar to those named in the body of the provision must seek real property tax exemptions from Congress. 6

*966 Certainly it is true that the District of Columbia Committee initially wished to draft in generalized terms the provisions of the Act relating to institutions whose buildings would be exempt from taxation. Senator McCarran, then the Chairman of the Committee, opened the hearings on these provisions with the following:

There are two methods of approach, the one is by specific legislation naming the institution and declaring it by law to be exempt. Personally I do not favor that form of legislation at all at any time because it savors of class legislation for a specific individual or a specific purpose. I would rather see legislation by general terms clearly defined permitting the executives of the law to apply good common sense, to exempt that which should be exempted and to impose taxes where taxes should be imposed. 7

But it was not long before the suggestion was made that this goal perhaps could not be realized. Counsel for the Special Committee for the District of Columbia Bar Association testified that the drafting of suitable generalized language would be found impossible and recommended that deserving institutions for whom generalized language could not be framed be specially exempted. He said:

The big difficulty seems to us exists in the District of Columbia in tax-exemption legislation arises (sic) because of the presence in the District of Columbia of a rather wide variety of national associations, quasi-religious, * * * quasi-charitable, quasi-educational, and quasi-scientific institutions which maintain themselves in the District of Columbia as far as headquarters are concerned and yet which are operated throughout the nation.
* * * * * *
With that in mind and recognizing the full force of the chairman’s statement that special legislation is undesirable and recognizing the desirability insofar as humanly possible to include these exemptions in classifications rather than by individual instances, the bar association directors nevertheless felt and the committee felt that your committee is going to reach the conclusion that in certain instances it may be necessary by a special clause in this bill to list or identify certain individual institutions *967 which obviously should be exempted, * * * but who nevertheless, if the classification were broadened to include them, would be apt to spread open the field into a variety of national organizations who should not, from a local taxpayer’s point of view, be exempted. * * * 8

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Bluebook (online)
444 F.2d 963, 144 U.S. App. D.C. 88, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-of-columbia-v-national-parks-association-cadc-1971.